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Title
Wright Saltus Ludington residence, view of fountain in courtyard with brick pavement, Montecito, 1931
Alternative Title
Wright Saltus Ludington residence
Contributor
Cornell, Ralph D.
Date Created and/or Issued
March 28, 1931
1931-03-28
Contributing Institution
UCLA, Library Special Collections, Charles E. Young Research Library
Collection
Cornell (Ralph D.) papers
Rights Information
copyrighted
Copyright is owned by the UC Regents. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Description
Access to this collection is generously supported by Arcadia funds.
The Ludington estate, also known as Val Verde, Dias Felices, the Henry Dater house, and the Dr. Warren Austin home, was designed by the architect Bertram Grovenor Goodhue, constructed in 1918 and then purchased by Charles H. Ludington in 1924. His son, Wright Saltus Ludington (who inherited the estate in 1927 or 1930), engaged the landscape architect Lockwood de Forest to design the gardens in 1925. Retaining the geometry of Goodhue's design and much of the wilderness, Lockwood transformed the gardens over a period of twenty-three years.
View of fountain in courtyard with brick pavement with boxwood hedge and archwy visible beyond.
Text from nitrate negative sleeve: W. S. Luddington [Ludington]. Montecito. 3/28/1931.
Type
image
Format
b&w nitrate negative
Identifier
uclamss_1411_0408
ark:/21198/zz002b6bbx
Language
English
Subject
Environment
Fountains
Gardens
Landscape architecture
Val Verde (Montecito, Calif.)
Source
Ralph D. Cornell Papers, 1925-1972

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